All Verbal Energy
- When 'terror' doesn't mean 'terrorism'The public conversation loses something when terror 鈥 a human emotion 鈥 becomes an all-purpose synonym for terrorism, a political or ideological tactic.
- Pupils who have yet to unfold their wingsWe get it that pre-K is the hot new thing in education 鈥 but are 4-year-olds really 'students'?
- Slipping into my cloak of transparencyHave telecommuting workers adopted the wrong metaphor for electronic face time?
- When did 'sex' become 'gender'?How Ruth Bader Ginsburg's secretary helped to effect a shift in public discourse.
- In order to omit needless words and cut deadwoodWherein the Monitor鈥檚 language columnist vents a bit on redundancies she loves to hate, but also warns wordsmiths against turning into 'search-and-replace' editors.
- The paradox of propertyThe two broad senses of the word 'property' shed light on the intellectual property debate.
- Abdicating, resigning, or just stepping down?Changes in Rome, the Netherlands, and Cuba illustrate our vocabulary of transition.
- The imperatives of National Grammar DayWho knew that a day devoted to good grammar could be so much fun?
- Shoveling NemoThe linguistic takeaway from a major snowstorm turns out to be that 'blizzard' is a relatively new term.
- What we talk about when we talk about moneyA look at the sometimes checkered vocabulary of public finance.
- When diplomatic language isn't just double talkWhen a former secretary of State describes the US and China as 'frenemies,' she reminds the Monitor's language columnist that diplomatic lingo isn't all euphemism.
- 'Carmen,' gypsies, bohemians, and 'others'A performance of 'Carmen' reminds the Monitor鈥檚 language columnist how vexed our language for various 'others' is.
- When young women find their 'creaky' voiceThe speech phenomenon known as 鈥渧ocal fry鈥 annoys some curmudgeons but may also demonstrate how young women are the innovators in our language.
- A fascination with vanishing languagesIn a world that seems relentlessly bent on homogenization, there's something appealing about languages that so perfectly fit the distinctive tribal cultures of their speakers.
- Stative verbs 鈥 I'm lovin' themYou know much more than you think you do about something you may never have heard of.
- Dynamic passives and the 'exonerative past'A look at the language of responsibility in Lincoln's Gettysburg Address.
- Vivid verbs defended with verveConstance Hale's 'Vex, Hex, Smash, Smooch' is a good read on writing, especially on the power of verbs.
- Hail to the neologizers in chiefUS presidents 鈥 and one president in particular 鈥 seem to have a knack for coining new terms.
- Etymology notes on a scandalIn the wake of the Petraeus affair, words nerds want to know the derivation of the term 'blackmail.'
- Constitutional copy-editingOregonians pass by a landslide a ballot measure to copyedit their state constitution; are there other documents we鈥檇 like to tinker with?